Author Archives: Megan Stephenson

Support for Lady Farmers Basketball

Monday, January 24th, 2011

A big mahalo to all those that took part in the Molokai girls basketball only home games at the Barn two weeks ago. I would like to thank the fans and community that came out and supported the girls, as they played a really good game against the visiting rivals from Seabury Hall, as well as for joining us as we honored four hardworking seniors at the conclusion of that game. It was just great to see everyone come out, especially with all kind of other events going on the island. Mahalo to Lisa Takata who helped with our halftime game and for getting the donated prizes for our game; Kamoi Snack and Go and Rawlins Chevron for the donated prizes; Kurt Go, for working hard helping those that were injured; Mr.

Hawaiians and Molokai

Monday, January 24th, 2011

The majority of the population on the island of Molokai is Hawaiians. Hawaiians are not attending public meetings, therefore the future of this island are being left in the hands of the minority. Hawaiians have a kuleana to protect their culture and island. You cannot do your kuleana without participation and knowledge. The Hawaiians Ku`e advertisment in this paper is a call to come together. We need to lokahi to help each other and our Island during these tough economic times.

Molokai’s Book Break

Monday, January 24th, 2011

Molokai’s Book Break

Molokai High and Molokai Middle School staff enjoyed the annual Library Book Break during the teacher workday on Monday, Jan. 3.  This event supports the school’s literacy plan to systemically build and sustain a culture of high literacy expectations.  New books, DVDs and Playaways (digital audiobooks) were arranged by curriculum subjects and genres for easy browsing.  Participants vied to be the first to reserve and borrow titles for their personal and instructional use.  One instructor said they “love opportunities like this where I get a chance to collaborate with colleagues about what I plan to do this quarter.”  Others added: “Fun, food – who could ask for more!” and “Great event! So much to choose from – thanks!”  Congratulations to the lucky number winners: Tori Maliu, Karen Harada, Laura Buller, Paula Friel and Iolani Kuoha.

Diane Mokuau

Grave Robbed

Monday, January 24th, 2011

Hello, I’m Larry Mitchell.  I would like to get some help to protect the dead.  My wife Deborah passed away on July 4, 2010 because of poor healthcare on Molokai. We went to the Quest provider and she said if you live on Molokai don’t get sick. To make a long story short, my wife fell in the hall of my house and broke her back. Four months later Queens [Medical Center] operated [on her] and she died. Debbie is laid to rest at Ka`aukapeka Cemetery. On Jan. 13, someone robbed my wife’s grave of a solar cross, a solar purple flower and a plain solar light. It’s pretty pathetic that she couldn’t get help in life and now she can’t get rest in death. I reported the incident to the police and they said vandals attacked the cemetery a little while back but have not caught anyone yet.

Acts of Kindness

Monday, January 24th, 2011

Acts of Kindness

Oprah’s call for “random acts of kindness” is alive and well on Molokai. I advertised a van for sale and a father with eight children came to look at the van. When he saw my yard with overgrown grass and pile of debris and rubbish left by former occupants, the father offered to clean up the piles and cut the grass. With sadness I responded “I have no money to pay you.” He replied, “That’s ok, I have lots of children to help.”
Two days later I returned from town and to my delight and surprise the whole gang was working away mowing and piling brush, etc. on their pickups, and little girls were raking up the grass. I went to help put the stickery brush on the pickups and a young boy said to me with a big smile, “you go rest, we can do this.”
This great-grandmother has been suffering from arthritis and I had prayed to be able to clean up this place. Part of my belief is cleanliness and order in and around our homes and premises. Can you imagine a beautiful island with no rubbish and old cans. Wow! The children worked so cheerfully and enjoyed doing kindness. I felt very humbled and searched the home for little gifts as a reward for a hard job well done.

Constance Jenkins

Life of the Land

Monday, January 24th, 2011

Life of the Land

Community Contributed

By G.T. Larson

The single, most important event in the history of Molokai has been the arrival of humans. Not the first coconut that floated ashore and sprouted, nor the first bird that took wing from some distant shore and alighted upon a local lava ledge. Not the first plant seed attached by some means to the aforementioned bird, which fell off and took root – none of these affected the life of this land as much as that first sailing canoe that appeared off Molokai’s shoreline.

As best as can be determined with no written historical records, Polynesians probably arrived in the Hawaiian Islands in the sixth or seventh centuries A.D. Halawa Valley was most likely the first permanent settlement on Molokai and possibly in all of Hawaii. At first, these early pioneers partook of the sea’s bounty, but the land offered very little in the way of food for humans. These early explorers came prepared for just this possible scenario. Fruit and vegetable plants were planted and chickens and pigs were introduced into the environment to supplement seafood. Along with the intended cargo were undoubtedly some unintended stowaways, such as the Polynesian Roof Rat.

When a forest bird builds its nest to raise its young, it changes the forest environment. These changes, if kept in balance, at the least, have a neutral effect on the natural world; at best, a positive effect. Nature has an inherent balance that allows flora and fauna to flourish. The early Hawaiians affected their new home by their “nest building,” but humans have a tendency to build larger and more complicated nests. The extensive taro walls and stream diversion ditches in Halawa Valley and the many fish ponds along Molokai’s south shore show a remarkable level of engineering, but all this comes at a cost. The flora and fauna of Halawa?s valley floor has been permanently altered.


To some extent this is the way it has to be, for humans are a part of the circle of the life of the land and we need nourishment just like the birds and the bees. The early Hawaiians knew that the `aina would provide for them as long as they preserved the `aina. This was not a perfect protection, for not all those feathers on the feather capes of the ali`is were collected by catch and release. Thousands of forest birds, including many not found today, died for man’s pride. It’s one thing to eat a bird for dinner, and quite another to wear birds to dinner.

For the most part, the early Hawaiians interaction with the natural world can probably be summed up best by a quote by Hawaiian Charlie Keau: “We knew about pollution, we knew about preservation, we knew about the environment long before the Westerners forgot about it, because we had to live with what we had here. If we disturb any of the environment, we have no place to run and hide. This is our home.” May we all take care of our home. Aloha.

Victory Gardens

Monday, January 24th, 2011

Victory Gardens

Community Contributed

By Glenn Teves, UH College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources

In 1943, our nation was at war, and resources of all kinds were being diverted to the war effort. The government rationed foods like sugar, butter, milk, cheese, eggs, coffee, meat and canned goods. Gas rationing, coupled with labor and transportation shortages, made it difficult to harvest and transport fruits and vegetables to market. As a result, the government turned to its citizens and encouraged them to plant "Victory Gardens" so families could provide for their own fruits and vegetables.

First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt led the call to plant gardens and even planted one on the White House lawn. At first, the Department of Agriculture (DOA) objected to this initiative, fearing that such a movement would hurt the food industry. Government agencies, private foundations, businesses, schools and seed companies all worked together to provide land, instruction and seeds for individuals and communities to grow food and promote self-reliance. A 20-minute film developed by the DOA explained how to create a garden, and it was shown far and wide. Victory gardens also allowed more resources to be shipped to the troops. Even the island of Molokai got involved and grew fields of Irish potatoes in the Ho`olehua Hawaiian Home Lands to support the war effort.


As a result, more than 20 million victory gardens were planted. Fruit and vegetables harvested in these home and community plots was estimated to be nine to 10 million tons, an amount equal to all commercial production of fresh vegetables. Victory gardeners had produced about 50 percent of all the vegetables in the nation that year. Families were encouraged to can their own vegetables to save commercial canned goods for the troops. As a result, families bought 315,000 pressure cookers (used in the process of canning) in 1943, compared to 66,000 in 1942. By 1946, with the war ended, the growing of gardens slowed in anticipation of greater produce availability with men returning from the war.

The post-war global economy brought many changes to the way we live, through marketing messages of consumerism and a reliance on others. A whole generation of baby boomers knows it no other way. As the population ages, we’re losing the experiences of the Great Depression and World War II. Our parents and grandparents, who experienced these struggles embraced the values of “use-it-up, wear-it-out, make-it-do, or do-without” out of necessity. These are the values that once defined our rural communities, and it’s difficult to tell if we embrace the same values today. Have we really learned from the struggles of the past, or are we living in the ‘I want it now’ disposable generation?

Today, many are struggling in the midst of this recession, and that makes many insecure about their food, especially when we live in one of the most isolated places in the world – 2,000 miles away from the closest major food producing areas. The global economy is out of our hands and we have no way of influencing it. Those with a keen instinct to survive in tough times are returning to the fundamentals, including gardening. Polls indicate that two million more households grew vegetables in 2008 than in 2007, and 2009 results indicate that there’s been a 20 percent increase over 2008. In March 2009, First Lady Michelle Obama planted an 1,100-square-foot "Kitchen Garden" on the White House lawn, the first since Eleanor Roosevelt's, to raise awareness about healthy food.  If the first lady can do it, so can we, and it all starts with a small plot of land and some seeds. Next time, we’ll talk about seeds.

MIL Champs Once Again

Monday, January 24th, 2011

MIL Champs Once Again

The Lady Farmers basketball team toppled Seabury Hall this past Friday night for the Maui Interscholastic League (MIL) championships on Maui, scoring 50-19.

Molokai scored 19 points and allowed 10 points in the first half. They shot 30 percent from the field in the first half, according to Maui News. They came back with 31 points in the second half, and allowed only 9 points in the second half.

“We got off to a slow start, but picked it up eventually,” said co-head coach Mike Hooper.

Molokai played their whole team, Hooper said, and some of the high scorers were Kalei Adolpho with 21 points and Marissa Sterner with 13 points.

After the half, the Lady Farmers extended to a 20-2 with the help of four straight points from Adolpho and two points from Kaira Kaulia-Makaiwi. They eventually went on a 30-point gap, according to the Maui News.


For the fourth consecutive year, the Lady Farmers will represent MIL Division II at the state tournament on Feb. 1.
“We’ll be preparing for one big goal after this,” Hooper said.

Before the state tournament, Molokai will head to Maui one more time to face off against two Division I teams. They’ll play against King Kekaulike on Friday and Lahainaluna on Saturday. The stakes aren’t high, but the games will be a test for Molokai.

The Farmers are now 6-0 in the regular MIL season. They will have to wait until this Sunday to find out who their opponent will be at the state tournament – vying for their third state championship.

“We have been working all season for this,” Hooper said.

Swim Team Bounces Back

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Swim Team Bounces Back

The Molokai swam positively into the Maui Interscholastic League (MIL) season last weekend. Six swimmers represented Molokai at the two meets: Lawaia Aalona, Michael Kikukawa, Michael Onofrio, Esther Lopez, Moriah Jenkins and Chelsea Simon.

“All swimmers had either personal best times or [swam their] time at the end of last season,” said coach Jessie Ford. “I felt their performances were exceptional given the challenges of the season.”

Challenges such as not having a pool. The swim team has been training at a private west end pool for the last month, but many practices were intermittent due to academics and Christmas break travel.

Aalona placed fifth in the 50 freestyle at 24.83 – beating his time last year by one second – during Friday night’s meet at Kihei Aquatic Center.


Returning swimmer Simon also dropped time in her 50 free, and competed in the tough 200 IM for the first time.

“I’m expecting her to surprise herself the next time she swims,” Ford said.

First-time swimmers Lopez and Onofrio burst onto their events with jitters that worked for them.

“Both of them surprised me quite a lot with how well they swam,” Ford said.

The second meet on Saturday, held at Kamehameha Maui, was more challenging for all, but “their effort on the second day matched the first,” she added.

“I’m proud of their tenacity, they stuck through a grueling season,” Ford said. Molokai boys came in seventh overall, but the girls did not place.

The swim team will head back to Kihei next weekend with more of their 10-member team, Jan. 21-22.

More Revision for Protected Land

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

Department of Land and Natural Resources News Release

Following a public meeting last August, the state Department of Land and Natural Resources (DLNR) will be holding a second public hearing regarding proposed amendments to the rules and regulations of the State Land Use Conservation District.

The meeting will be on Jan. 31 at 5:30 p.m. at the Mitchell Pauole Center.

The policies would affect the shoreline setback, permits for land management activity, removal of invasive plants, fishponds and beach restoration, among many other things. The Office of Conservation and Coastal Lands (OCCL) is responsible for overseeing approximately two million acres of private and public lands that lie within the conservation district.